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Chapter 11 Liberation: African Americans and the Civil War Confederate States 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. South Carolina (December 20, 1860)[4][5] Mississippi (January 9, 1861)[6] Florida (January 10, 1861)[7] Alabama (January 11, 1861)[8] Georgia (January 19, 1861)[9] Louisiana (January 26, 1861)[10] Texas (February 1, 1861)[11] Confederate States Con’t 8. Virginia (April 17, 1861; ratified by voters May 23, 1861)[13] 9. Arkansas (May 6, 1861)[14] 10. Tennessee (May 7, 1861; ratified by voters June 8, 1861)[15][16] 11. North Carolina (May 20, 1861)[17] Border States • • • • • Delaware Maryland Kentucky Missouri West Virginia Map of a nation divided I. Lincoln’s Aims • Preserve the Union – – – – Everything else secondary Especially concerned about the border states Call for 75,000 volunteers Black volunteers rejected II. Black Men Volunteer and Are Rejected • Fate of Union tied to issue of slavery • Fate of slavery tied to the outcome of war Lincoln’s Initial Position • Reluctant to move against slavery, 1861 – Border state loyalty – Supported compensated emancipationcolonization – Wanted to end slavery in border states, April 1862 – Warned border states to accept compensation or risk getting nothing, July 1862 Lincoln Moves toward Emancipation • Victory and Union tied to slavery issue – – – – “Strike at the heart of the rebellion” Tells his cabinet, summer 1862 William Seward warns Lincoln to wait Montgomery Blair feared fall elections Black People Reject Colonization • Would not retreat from colonization – Liberia – Haiti – Black people not interested IV. Preliminary Emancipation • White southerners ridiculed it • Many white northerners had little enthusiasm – Antiblack riots – Northern Democrats almost all opposed • Denounced Lincoln and Republicans • Most black people felt gratified V. Emancipation Proclamation • Limited to areas still in rebellion • Did not include border states • Changes war goals – Preserve the Union – Make people free Effects of Proclamation on the South • Ended chance of foreign recognition • Encouraged – Slaves to flee – Slaves to resist VI. Black Men Fight for the Union • Emancipation Proclamation – – – – Authorized black men to enlist Union defeats and the need for manpower Thomas Wentworth Higginson Robert Gould Shaw Black Men Fight for the Union (cont.) • Discrimination and hostility – Segregated units • White officers – Often held racist beliefs – Lower pay scale • White privates $13/month • Black privates $10/month Violent Opposition to Black People (cont.) • Union troops and slaves – Often treated slaves horribly • Rapes and assaults were not uncommon – Others found compassion for enslaved people • “I have no heart in this war if the slaves cannot be made free,” a Union soldier wrote. XII. Black People and the Confederacy • Confederacy based on defense of slavery • Benefited from the labors of bonds people – Toiled in fields – Worked in factories – Permitted more white men to serve in military Black People and the Confederacy (cont.) • Confederates enslave free black people – Davis counter proclamation • “All free negroes . . . shall be placed on the slave status and be deemed to be chattels. . . forever.” • Ordered Confederate armies to capture free black people in the North and enslave them. – Robert E. Lee, Pennsylvania 1863 Black Confederates – Free black people volunteered services • Show loyalty and gain white acceptance • Re-enslavement concerns • Southern leaders generally ignored offers unless for menial labor Black Enlistments • General Patrick Cleburne recommends, early 1864 – President Davis cease and desist order – Most southerners considered arming slaves appalling – Defied southern assumptions • “If slaves will make good soldiers our whole theory of slavery is wrong.”--Howell Cobb • March 1865 Confederate Congress voted to enlist 300,000 • Receive same pay as white soldiers • Slaves freed only with consent of owners and state agreed XIII. Conclusion • 185,000 black soldiers and sailors served in the Union military – Most had been former slaves – Almost 40,000 died in combat or of disease during the war • Abraham Lincoln and the shift in public attitudes – – – – White man’s war Colonization Enlistment Appreciation